$yy St 4 tllr W^t*ih"^"T^x^'T'hP^P^^ V? m~ •m?»m •••-. W-\•• y% MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE. Default haviog beeb made In the payment of the sura of nine aud fifty-two one 'tundredlhs dollars, interest, which is claimed to be due and Is due at the date of this notice, upon a mort­ gage duly executed by Edwin Patch and wife, Viola A. Patch, as mortgagors. to George \V. Thayer, mortgagee, dated the 18th day of April, 1892, and recorded in the ottice of the Register of Deeds in the county of Morrison and state of Minnesota on the 18th day'of April, 189?. at 5*30 o'clock, p. m, in book *T" of mortgages, on page 437, and no action or proceeding having been instituted at law or otherwise to recover the debt secured by s&ld mortgage or any part thereof, notice is hereby given, that by virtue of thu power of sale contained in said mortgage •ho mortgage Will be foreclosed by a sale of the' premises described in and conveyed by said mortgage, to-wit: Lots one and two in section thirty, towns...

7-T .8, S*}SjtV•• §js»fV I fc. People's Party. Meeting »i: *"*f IK /.V, 'TT There were about forty present at the People's party meeting held at 1 all hopes of the Democrats doing anything to better the condition of affairs and left that party to join the People's party. He is in favor of free coinage of silver. Mr. Collins stated that the object of the meeting was to read over the party's plat­ form and make arrangements for organizing a People's party club in every town iu the county. He had left his copy of the Minnesota, plat­ form at home, but C. D. Boom read the South Dakota platform which is very much the same. Chas. Whiting, a farmer living on the West side, was called upon and he made a few remarks in favor of the People's party. Mr. Boom then made quite a lengthy speech in which he touched on the tariff. He said one party wanted to build a Chinese wail around this country while the other wished to tear it down and have a tariff for revenue onty. When they got down to that ...

6T'"» gp si«. ft: te •mm •m-t mat CAM'S BILL GOSSIP Baseball Flayers Scored For Dissipation and Carelessness. PLAYING 0 PIE AND ICE CREAM. Bales Needed to Check the Indulgence of the Players7 Animal Appetites and Keep the Ball Tossers In Good Physical Condi­ tion—Career of "Father** Fonts. V- .. .. The recent railroad strikes and tieups gave opportunity for a repetition of the old assertion that there is a friendly feel­ ing between the labor organizations of the country and the baseball players who make their living professionally. One western writer of prominence went so far as to de­ clare that this bond of fraternalism was so strong that the striking railroaders would see to it that the National league teams not only had transportation furnished to them from city to city, but also were pro­ vided with the luxury of sleeping cars, even of the boycotted Pullman variety, when the unboycotted kind could not be commanded. I do not believe there is the least foun­ dation for this ridi...

fL .*»„, Sj" •S. i' V«f- .-1, rf A J1"' !. p? 41- §i S 10 1 WILL THEY THROW HIM? It Is Possible that the Dem cratic County Officers Will Offer Ho vide as a Sacrifice. From Saturday's Daily. The fact that Sheriff Houde is the only Democratic county officer who has any open opposition for a re nomination gives grounds for the report that the other county officers have decided to make use of him as a sacrifice to the demand that there be some change in conducting county affairs. Commenting on the fact that the county expenses are very liigh for the population and valua­ tion the Herald says, "It is claimed that the sheriff gets more money from the county than he is entitled. If this is true some means ought to be found to reduce the amounts al­ lowed him." The "claim" is not disputed, and it is quite certain that a •"claim" against the economy of most any other county officer would be quickly challenged by the paper that has for stockholders many of the county officers. We say "most an...

4 At #118 ^5^w^-v ANOTHER FIRE. E. G. Lefebvre's House and the Contents Destroyed. 4 o'clock Monday morning the residence of Officer .E. C. Lefebvre on First street north was discovered to be on fire by Mr. Meyette, who lives near ther«\ He gave the alarm, but before the department got there the fire had gained such headway that it was impossible to e\\n save the contents. stream of water was turned on which soon put out the flames. Adolph Doucette's building near it was damaged slightly, and would have been destroyed had it not been for the work of the depart­ ment. Mr. Lefebvre's building was a story-and-a-half frame stuctu re erect­ ed several years ago on the corner of First street and First avenue north, and then moved to its present loca­ tion. T£e family lived there during the day, but at night they were afraid to stay there during Mr. Lefebvre's absence, so they Blept at Mr. Doucette's. The origin of the tire is unknown, but many think it was the work of an incen­ diary. The...

If' The Rival erage C~ I I VFFELC 1 Varsity Crews to Meet This Month. IT LOOKS LIES YALE ONCE MORE. the New Haven Oarsmen Are Much Heavier Than the Cambridge Crew—Of the Six­ teen Men.but Four Are Veterans—The Race Will Probably Occur June 28, As the shrill piping of the robin heralds the approach of springtime, lifo the annual wailing of the Yale and Harvard calamity howlers about this time is a certain har­ binger that the blue and the crimson are soon to meet in their great annual boat race. The Yale howl is usually to the ef­ fect that Bob Cook has just looked over the crew and is so disappointed at its showing that he is undecided whether to commit suicide or return to Philadelphia. The Harvard wail is to the effect that the crimson cre$v is so bad, so awfully, awfully bad, that Mayor Bancroft is on the verge of nervous prostration. There is occasionally something in the Harvard rumor, for Harvard usually turns out a losing crew, but in the case of Yale the reports that the "bo...

I ,v/l 4 Governor Nelson Opens the Minnesota Campaign With a Plain Talk to Farmers. MODERN REFORMERS SCORED Common-Sense Statement of Facts That All Can Under­ stand and That All Should Study. Governor Nelson addressed the Mar­ shall County Republican Convention, at Argyle, July 28, and presented plain, common-sense arguments, that com- KNUTE NELSON, Republican Candidate for Governor of Minnesota. pletely brush away the fallacies of modern reformers. The address in full is here published, and every man in Minnesota, especially the farmers, should study it well: Hard times and industrial and economic depression, in various forms .and from various causes, have been in our midst during the past sixteen months. In the wake 0$ these times and as £n incident thereto are a number of "I-told-you-so" reformers who have an easy, flippant and demagogic way of diagnosing and ac­ counting for all our troubles and all our ailments, and who have no difficulty at all to suggest and tender, in conne...

'c^S.'Si? af?" #r u. 'i- & VJr iboV 1«08 8 87 1S71 Fper lite #V ipfll- 1- •y SS5?'' J,*** 'l'-?. Vv riteisi gST 'Z*t i? & vL^ would reap a big harvest, but it would be at the expense of all the rest of us—ot the entire country* No, my friends, silver monometallism i?t least as dangerous as gold monometal­ lism.^ No honest man, having the good of his country at heart, wants either. We want honest, genuine bimetallism. We have it in a measure and to a limited ex­ tent today. And the substantial, the statesmanlike and the patriotic question is, how to maintain and enlarge it, not how to destroy it. We can, by ourselves, sustain it to a limited and local degree, as we have ever siiice the Bland act of 1876, and as we never succeeded in doing be­ fore. We can enlarge it to its greatest limit and put it on an enduring basis by international agreement among the lead­ ing commercial nations of the world. The former is bimetallism, the latter inter­ national. The former rests on the ...

p® te fH 7t I w? & •'fciri-.- aSv m* m-. The Local A. R. U. Lodges Vote to Discontinue the Big Strike. ONLY TWO ROADS EXCEPTED. Employes of the Santa Fe and Eastern ,to Illinois Re­ main Out. CHICAGO, Aug. 6.—After a struggle of 40 days against the united railroads, the American Railway union in Chicago At a meeting of the delegates of the 24 local labor unions affiliated with the A. R. U. during the afterroon it was voted to declare the strike off in Chi­ cago, except on the Santa Fe and Chi­ cago and Eastern Illinois. The action was purely local, and the declaration does not even affect Pullman. Neither President Debs nor any of the A. R. U. national officials were present at the meeting. In fact President Debs had left the city for Terre Haute before it occurred. FATALLY BEATEN. Rioters at Brazil, Ind., Brutally Assault a Couple of Strangers. BRAZIL, Ind., Aug. 6.—David Wilson and Henry Wright, residents of Attica, were attacked during the morning by a crowd of men on the Jac...

•M- :p "Vi #T ii: H fef $$ 4 i&m mi CAPTAIN BOTTOLFSEN'S STORY. The Crew Narrowly Escaped When the Vessel Was Wrecked. TROMSOE, Norway, Aug. 8.—Captain Bottolfsen, who brought to this place the news of the loss of the Wellman Polar expedition steamer Bagnyald Jarl, gives in an interview further details of the adven tares of the Wellman party. He says that the expedition reached "Walden Island on May 17, when the pack ice was becoming troublesome. Mr. Wellman and his party started north on sledges on May 24. On May 28 the screwing of the ice commenced in earnest. Near the steamer were ice­ bergs which towered as high as the yard arms of the vessel's masts. While the crew were drinking their afternoon cof­ fee on that day the steamer was sud­ denly crushed by the ice as if it were a matchbox. The water rushed in with terrific force, and in a few minutes the vessel was a complete wreck. The crew in the meantime had escaped to the shore. The men had been occupied for several days pr...

Mvl •MJ "vl 4| H**'I •:m$\ 1 £_^ Sltl||§ 1- X:- MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE. Default having been made !a the payment of the sum of twenty-two and thircy-two hun­ dredths dollars, which is claitafed to be dne and is dne at the date of th» notice upon a certain mortgage, duly executed aud delivered by Hornidas Lareau and his wife, Melvina Lareau, mortgagors, to George W. Thayer mortgagee, bearing date the 9th day of September 1892.rand with a power of sale therein contained, duly rrcorded in the office of the register of deeds in and for County of Morrison, and State of Min­ nesota, on the 29th day of October 1J92 at 9 o'clock a. m.. in book **1" of mortgages on page 460. And no action or proceedings having been instituted, at law or otherwise, to recover the debt secured by said mortgage or any purfc thereof, now therefore, notice is hereby given, that by virtue of the power, of sale contained in said mortgage, and pursuant to the'statute in euch case made«#vnd provided, the said mort­...

I ft &v & If !K |i- iTTi.E FAILS ing for $?f:':: r,u J, »•.- Vi IV H&.* ^•IL^ «T f.yf l& lv H-*:^ £.%. •ft*"* 6* s-* •is. $4 BY THE TRANSCRIPT PUB. CO. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY. SUBSCRIPTION 0''e year. S IX ]Q\/lltm**M*aM«Maw ree moiitbs 9 HWM 10 ADVERTISING RATES HOW. LITTLE FALLS, FRIDAY, AUG. 10,1894. Republican District Convention. St. Cloud,. A 14 At the non-partisan convention at Aitkin Wednesday Judge Hol­ land was nominated for re-election as judge of the "fifiejuth. judicial district The Populists have as little lik Gov. Nelson's speech as the Democrats had for I. E. Staples' letter. Tiuth is some­ times disagreeable. Idle money is so plenty in Lon­ don that banks have reduced the interest allowance on balances to per cent. Gilt-edge securities have attained a higher price than -ever. The A. R. U. at Chicago has declared the great strike off on all except one or two railroads. The organization in other parts of the country will doubtless follow the example of ...

fcJ. Ml a# BEAT, I Miss May Plante, taking a vacation. the time in the city. .i-^&i&s??^'£g&& -Sufi I fe3*kv-~f PRINTlNC TIB MMPT JOB OFFffil S NOW SUPPLIED WITH NEW MATERIAL TROUGHOUT. CHEAP AND RAPID. FRIDAY, AUG. 10,1894. LOCAL ITEUUES- Dr. Niven Aug. 20 and 21. The bridge leading to the Inter estate Mill has been re-planked. F. B. Stuart went to Minneapolis on the afternoon train yesterday. Quite a number of our people spent Sunday at the surroundifig lakes. A daughter was born to Mj*. and Mrs. N. P. Nelson Monday evening. A new high school building will be erected at Windom this year cost­ ing $16,600. Miss Anna Anderson, of Minneapo­ lis, is in th'i city visiting her sister, Mrs H. E. MeyerS. of the Fair, is She will pass Teeth without plates—Dr. Niven August 20 and 21. G. Van Buskirk iH moving his hous? from its old location to Sec­ ond street southwest. Mrs. C. Pullman, who has been ill for several weeks, is recovering and now able to sit up. William Covey ha...

r'' I 1 1 Cr 1 -1 great •JS ****$?)$ l&yv %k* *'*1''-• & &r- ®fe it® ot To the Anger of the Herald and Sorrow of the Court House Crowd. The Tr&nscripi Heeds Not the Suggestion to be Si­ lent on County Finances. Something over two weeks ago the Transcript called attention to the remarkable record of Morrison county's finances for 1893, during which time the county revenue ex­ penses were $10,000 more than the re­ ceipts of the revenue fund. Such a condition naturally reflected on the management of county affairs, and also on the officials who control those affairs. It was a matter which should and does attract the attention of taxpayers. It is a sub­ ject upon which the county officials •are very tender, and the newspaper in which most of the court house •crowd are officials and stockholders was particularly enraged. The Little Falls Electric & Water company supplies the city of Little Falls with 55 hydrants for fire pro­ tection and receives in orders there­ fore...

:t f* ^V'A P. %:, $ llhil Council Proceed ings.? The city council met in rej^"1ai* ses­ sion on Tuesdays evening. Those present were Aids. Butler, Turner, Mali a n, Wrigh t, Hoffnaan,. Moeglein and President Hording:. 1 it* Minutes of meeting: of July 8, 20 and 27 were read and approved. Bills were allowed amounting *o $962.56. Upon motion the street commis­ sioners report for July amountingto $96 .25 was approved.. The city clerk was instructed to correspond with the Northwestern Telephone Exchange company wit* •regard to placing the fire alarm wires on telephone poles. Mayor Staples appointed J. H. Rhodes, Mrs. M. E. Butler and Jno. A. Berkey as members of the library board for three years. The appoint­ ments wer$f9ntirmed by thecoun c'l. Upon motion the city clerk was instructed to draw an order semi­ monthly for sewer wdrk upon esti­ mate of the city engineer. Samuel Trebby and others re­ quested that the sewer be laid on Fourth street instead of up the alley between Third and F...

•i wm Friday afternoon about five o'clock A. M. Anderson's tailor tsliop jtust -north of M. Maurin's store WHS dis­ covered to b'e on fire b.v .7. M. Cota. flHe immediately gave the alarm and ran across the street and informed Anderson that the building he was in was on fire. In an instant after the fire was discovered the back room t)f the building was ablaze, and Anderson barely had time to get his property out. The chemical engine was the first aparatus at the fire and quickly discharged its con tentent into the flames folding the fire in check until the hose companies came and with a couple of well di­ rected streams drowned the fire "out in a few minutes. The building was damaged to the extent of probably $40 and there was no insurance. Anderson lost nothing by the fire except his time, and he was put to the trouble of moving out and in again. A CLOSE SHAVE. The Pine Xree Lumber Co.'s East Side Mill Caught Fire. Friday afternoon about 5 o'clock, at about the time when the alarm...

tjje K», 'P 8K yj n?'.w v* f&c*"* *fcr py :fiV LSi'-! K" *1 Isp iti 'iSl Ptife V* ii*: '.jSsSSI f# ts'i -tei j& Board of EdlefttioC' *!g Tne regular tn6nthly meeting of the Board of Education was held at the court house this morning. Those present wgre President Schluesener, G. M. Fortier, A'. B. Davidson, F. Hoffman. F* Elleri becker absent O. C. Tra*e. A number of bills were allowed and the following resolution was adopted relating to H. JF. 8chleus* pfc ener, the retiring member We. the undersigned mem tiers of jg()Hr(j of Education of Little Falls recognizing the faithful manner in which Mr. H. F. Sclileusener has performed his duties as a mem­ ber of that brtard during the long term of years which he has served and appreciating the deep interest he has manifested in forwarding the interests of our .schools by doing everything within his power as pres­ ident of the Board of Education to promote the educational welfare of our community do hereby extend our hearty thanks f...